William Heath Robinson, (born May 31, 1872, London, Eng.—died Sept. 13, 1944, London) British cartoonist, book illustrator, and designer of theatrical scenery, who was best known for his cartoons that featured fantastic machinery.

The Home-Made Car and How to Make It, illustration by William Heath Robinson for The …

In 1887 Robinson went to Islington School of Art and later briefly attended the Royal Academy schools, London. He illustrated a Don Quixote and an Arabian Nights, both in 1899, and in 1900 he illustrated an edition of the poems of Edgar Allan Poe. He continued book illustration and also did some advertising work, but his chief fame rests on his humorous drawings, which first appeared in The Sketch and later in The Bystander, The Strand Magazine, The Illustrated London News, and other English and American publications. Before World War I he had achieved a worldwide reputation. His drawings are particularly notable for the fun he made of machinery. A ludicrously impractical or elaborate machine came to be called “a Heath Robinson contraption.” Absurdities (1934) is a collection of his drawings. His autobiography is My Line of Work (1938).

Learn More in these related articles:

originally, and still, a full-size sketch or drawing used as a pattern for a tapestry, painting, mosaic, or other graphic art form, but also, since the early 1840s, a pictorial parody utilizing caricature, satire, and usually humour. Cartoons are used today primarily for conveying political...